The main purpose of this ongoing blog is to track planetary extreme, or record temperatures related to climate change. Any reports I see of ETs will be listed below the main topic of the day and are archived on each prior post. I’ll refer to extreme or temperatures as ETs (not extraterrestrials).😉
Main Topic: Due to Its Evolved Psychology, Is Humanity Built Towards Climate Failure?
Dear Diary. Last week I came across an interesting by scary article with some science that has yet to be confirmed. What if what I and other climate scientists are doing is moot because of fundamental evolved human psychology, which won’t allow our species to adjust its overall behavior enough to prevent us from going over the +2.0°C above preindustrial conditions threshold for climate catastrophe? What I am presenting today cuts against the grain of activists like Dr. Michael Mann who think we have the collective will and know-how to solve the climate problem before it is too late.
Given what I know about human nature and how we have reacted to the climate crisis so far (Just look at how COP 28 went as an example.), I’m leaning more towards the results of this study, but will not throw in the proverbial towel on humanity just yet. After reading this article from Science Daily, you decide:
Evolution might stop humans from solving climate change | ScienceDaily
Evolution might stop humans from solving climate change
Central features of human evolution may stop our species from resolving global environmental problems like climate change, says a new study led by the University of Maine.
Date: January 2, 2024
Source: University of Maine
Summary: Human culture has evolved to allow humans to extract resources and helped us expand to dominate the biosphere. But the same evolutionary processes may counteract efforts to solve new global environmental threats like climate change, according to a new study. Tackling the climate crisis will require worldwide regulatory, technical and economic systems supported by strong global cooperation. However, this new study concludes that the group-level processes characteristic of human cultural evolution, will cause environmental competition and conflict between sub-global groups, and work against global solutions. Adapting to climate change and other environmental problems will, therefore, require human evolution to change.
Humans have come to dominate the planet with tools and systems to exploit natural resources that were refined over thousands of years through the process of cultural adaptation to the environment. University of Maine evolutionary biologist Tim Waring wanted to know how this process of cultural adaptation to the environment might influence the goal of solving global environmental problems. What he found was counterintuitive.
The project sought to understand three core questions: how human evolution has operated in the context of environmental resources, how human evolution has contributed to the multiple global environmental crises, and how global environmental limits might change the outcomes of human evolution in the future.
Waring’s team outlined their findings in a new paper published in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B. Other authors of the study include Zach Wood, UMaine alumni, and Eörs Szathmáry, a professor at Eötvös Loránd University in Budapest, Hungary.
Human expansion
The study explored how human societies’ use of the environment changed over our evolutionary history. The research team investigated changes in the ecological niche of human populations, including factors such as the natural resources they used, how intensively they were used, what systems and methods emerged to use those resources and the environmental impacts that resulted from their usage.
This effort revealed a set of common patterns. Over the last 100,000 years, human groups have progressively used more types of resources, with more intensity, at greater scales and with greater environmental impacts. Those groups often then spread to new environments with new resources.
The global human expansion was facilitated by the process of cultural adaptation to the environment. This leads to the accumulation of adaptive cultural traits — social systems and technology to help exploit and control environmental resources such as agricultural practices, fishing methods, irrigation infrastructure, energy technology and social systems for managing each of these.
“Human evolution is mostly driven by cultural change, which is faster than genetic evolution. That greater speed of adaptation has made it possible for humans to colonize all habitable land worldwide,” says Waring, associate professor with the UMaine Senator George J. Mitchell Center for Sustainability Solutions and the School of Economics.
Moreover, this process accelerates because of a positive feedback process: as groups get larger, they accumulate adaptive cultural traits more rapidly, which provides more resources and enables faster growth.
“For the last 100,000 years, this has been good news for our species as a whole.” Waring says, “but this expansion has depended on large amounts of available resources and space.”
Today, humans have also run out of space. We have reached the physical limits of the biosphere and laid claim to most of the resources it has to offer. Our expansion also is catching up with us. Our cultural adaptations, particularly the industrial use of fossil fuels, have created dangerous global environmental problems that jeopardize our safety and access to future resources.
Global limits
To see what these findings mean for solving global challenges like climate change, the research team looked at when and how sustainable human systems emerged in the past. Waring and his colleagues found two general patterns. First, sustainable systems tend to grow and spread only after groups have struggled or failed to maintain their resources in the first place. For example, the U.S. regulated industrial sulfur and nitrogen dioxide emissions in 1990, but only after we had determined that they caused acid rain and acidified many water bodies in the Northeast. This delayed action presents a major problem today as we threaten other global limits. For climate change, humans need to solve the problem before we cause a crash.
Second, researchers also found evidence that strong systems of environmental protection tend to address problems within existing societies, not between them. For example, managing regional water systems requires regional cooperation, regional infrastructure and technology, and these arise through regional cultural evolution. The presence of societies of the right scale is, therefore, a critical limiting factor.
Tackling the climate crisis effectively will probably require new worldwide regulatory, economic and social systems — ones that generate greater cooperation and authority than existing systems like the Paris Agreement. To establish and operate those systems, humans need a functional social system for the planet, which we don’t have.
“One problem is that we don’t have a coordinated global society which could implement these systems,” says Waring, “We only have sub-global groups, which probably won’t suffice. But you can imagine cooperative treaties to address these shared challenges. So, that’s the easy problem.”
The other problem is much worse, Waring says. In a world filled with sub-global groups, cultural evolution among these groups will tend to solve the wrong problems, benefitting the interests of nations and corporations and delaying action on shared priorities. Cultural evolution among groups would tend to exacerbate resource competition and could lead to direct conflict between groups and even global human dieback.
“This means global challenges like climate change are much harder to solve than previously considered,” says Waring. “It’s not just that they are the hardest thing our species has ever done. They absolutely are. The bigger problem is that central features in human evolution are likely working against our ability to solve them. To solve global collective challenges we have to swim upstream.”
Looking forward
Waring and his colleagues think that their analysis can help navigate the future of human evolution on a limited Earth. Their paper is the first to propose that human evolution may oppose the emergence of collective global problems and further research is needed to develop and test this theory.
Waring’s team proposes several applied research efforts to better understand the drivers of cultural evolution and search for ways to reduce global environmental competition, given how human evolution works. For example, research is needed to document the patterns and strength of human cultural evolution in the past and present. Studies could focus on the past processes that lead to the human domination of the biosphere, and on the ways cultural adaptation to the environment is occurring today.
But if the general outline proves to be correct, and human evolution tends to oppose collective solutions to global environmental problems, as the authors suggest, then some very pressing questions need to be answered. This includes whether we can use this knowledge to improve the global response to climate change.
“There is hope, of course, that humans may solve climate change. We have built cooperative governance before, although never like this: in a rush at a global scale.” Waring says.
The growth of international environmental policy provides some hope. Successful examples include the Montreal Protocol to limit ozone-depleting gasses, and the global moratorium on commercial whaling.
New efforts should include fostering more intentional, peaceful and ethical systems of mutual self-limitation, particularly through market regulations and enforceable treaties, that bind human groups across the planet together ever more tightly into a functional unit.
But that model may not work for climate change.
“Our paper explains why and how building cooperative governance at the global scale is different, and helps researchers and policymakers be more clear-headed about how to work toward global solutions,” says Waring.
This new research could lead to a novel policy mechanism to address the climate crisis: modifying the process of adaptive change among corporations and nations may be a powerful way to address global environmental risks.
As for whether humans can continue to survive on a limited planet, Waring says “we don’t have any solutions for this idea of a long-term evolutionary trap, as we barely understand the problem.” says Waring.
“If our conclusions are even close to being correct, we need to study this much more carefully,” he says.
Story Source:
Materials provided by University of Maine. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.
Journal Reference:
- Timothy M. Waring, Zachary T. Wood, Eörs Szathmáry. Characteristic processes of human evolution caused the Anthropocene and may obstruct its global solutions. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 2023; 379 (1893) DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2022.0259
Cite This Page:
University of Maine. “Evolution might stop humans from solving climate change.” ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 2 January 2024. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/01/240102151942.htm>.
Here are more “ET’s” recorded from around the planet the last couple of days, their consequences, and some extreme temperature outlooks, as well as any extreme precipitation reports:
After an extremely mild December, a big changevis coming in USA starting from the West with a strong arctic blast.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 6, 2024
In the meanwhile very mild air will flow to Greenland with temperatures likely to rise above 10C/50F. Huge contrasts are ahead. Stay tuned. https://t.co/IqVAHD3T8a
It's another record day in Europe.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 6, 2024
Dozens of records were smashed between Balkans, Albania, Greece, Turkey and Cyprus.
Records in ALBANIA:21.8C at Kucova, 20.6 Durres.
In Turkey up to 26C.
Also Records warm nights widespread in Croatia and most of Balkans. https://t.co/2C519eYacV
Persistent record heat in Northern AUSTRALIA where records have been falling every day.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 7, 2024
Records of highest Minimum temperatures at Mc Cluer Island,Point Fawcett (records highest max and highest min) and Troughton Island with minimum temperatures around 30C and high humidity. pic.twitter.com/xKpkwTGnWp
More records in JAPAN.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 7, 2024
12.6 Minakami tied its highest January temperature while more records of highest minimums were broken:
6.5 Fukushima
7.5 Nihonmatsu
3.0 Yonezawa
4.2 Takahata
Some famous snowy localities are currently with 0cm of snow, which is extremely rare in January. pic.twitter.com/uwxeCowMlD
South America is already breaking monthly records of high temperatures,starting from BRAZIL.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 7, 2024
The state of Alagoas is having its most persistent heat wave in history with several days with max. around 40C.
43C in Argentina is just the appetizer for the brutal heat coming… https://t.co/mlBNCL2hP2
Caribbeans and Central America are living their most record breaking heat event in history.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 7, 2024
Monthly records are being smashed allover in nearly every single country from Mexico to Guatemala, Honduras,all Caribbeans islands (except Cuba and Bahamas)
Many fell with huge margins too https://t.co/cDTxt9AuwY
Yet another incredibly warm night in the Eastern Mediterranean:
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 7, 2024
Minimum temperatures of 17/19C in several Greek and Turkish stations today, typical of September and many records of January warmest night broken.
Very warm day on the Black Sea with temperatures >17C in Crimea. https://t.co/6cZyNzD5zd
The warm air has reached the southern tip of Greenland (it will extend further North)
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 7, 2024
the MINIMUM temperature today at Narsarsuaq failed to drop below +7.9C (now +11C) ,very close to the January highest min. ever recorded in Greenland
In the next days there is a chance to beat it pic.twitter.com/QNrcHC8D6X
The first widespread snowstorm of the 2023-2024 winter season across the Eastern US is wrapping up. Here are the seasonal snowfall totals at NWS climate stations as of 5 pm Sunday January 7th. Despite the new snow, all locations are still running below normal for the season. pic.twitter.com/gQrRCbzrbJ
— NWS Eastern Region (@NWSEastern) January 7, 2024
Here is more brand-new December and 2023 climatology:
After a very warm December, 2023 in the Czech Republic ended as the warmest year on record.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 7, 2024
Average temperature was 9.7C , which is 1.4C above the 1991-2020 normal.
More details 👎 https://t.co/30mfzOjpgt
December 2023 in #Kenya had an average temperature of 23.0C which is 0.2C above normal.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 7, 2024
Rainfalls were scarce in Central and Northern areas while they were slightly above average in Western and coastal areas.
See rainfall anomalies map by Meteo Kenya. pic.twitter.com/b5AzrHxFmf
December 2023 in #Peru was another warm month with rainfalls following a typical El Niño pattern:
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 6, 2024
Wetter than normal in Central Northern Andine areas and drier in the South. 👎 https://t.co/HM9R1hdp1V
December 2023 in French Guiana was another hot month:
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 7, 2024
Average temperature in Cayenne AP was 27.7C, +1C above normal while total rainfall was 285.1mm , 19% below normal.
January already started breaking heat records.
El Niño is expected to remain strong for few more months. pic.twitter.com/biAUUZMvYT
December 2023 in #Paraguay had temperature anomalies between -0.5C and 2.5C vs 1991-2020.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 7, 2024
It was dry in the Chaco in the North/West of the country and wetter than normal in the South/East.
See temperatures and rainfalls anomalies map by DMH/Dinac pic.twitter.com/H2jSxtAd0z
December 2023 in #Slovakia was also warm with temperature anomalies between 0.5C in Spišské Vlachy and +2.6C in Malackyended.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 7, 2024
2023 as a whole was also very warm and the warmest on record in most of the southern ,eastern and western areas. (see below). https://t.co/dqNf8yCLW4
December 2023 in Bermuda had an average temperature of 19.2C which is 0.5C below normal and was one of the few world maritime areas ending the month colder than average.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 7, 2024
It was drier than normal.
Average sea temperature was 20.1C, which matches the norm. pic.twitter.com/Q0B9Cu2x5s
Here is More Climate and News from Sunday:
(As usual, this will be a fluid post in which more information gets added during the day as it crosses my radar, crediting all who have put it on-line. Items will be archived on this site for posterity. In most instances click on the pictures of each tweet to see each article. The most noteworthy items will be listed first.)
Here's another view of craziness of 2023, showing the monthly average global surface temperature for each year, 1940-2023.
— Prof. Eliot Jacobson (@EliotJacobson) January 7, 2024
December's record 1.78°C above the baseline may mark the largest monthly anomaly in more than 125,000 years. pic.twitter.com/3FRZWEq89Q
I love that @ScientistRebel1 used my scatter plot of monthly temperatures to make this excellent short. Thank you! https://t.co/WVTMXxdTZh
— Prof. Eliot Jacobson (@EliotJacobson) January 7, 2024
Latest NMME forecast is out and extends into summer. Pretty much all of the component models have La Niña developing as we head into summer, along with a warm Atlantic. There is some variability in how quickly the Niña develops, and also some models more of a +PDO/+PMM. (1/2) pic.twitter.com/X06W77JLPU
— Andy Hazelton (@AndyHazelton) January 7, 2024
How bad will it get?
— Prof. Peter Strachan (@ProfStrachan) January 7, 2024
What frightens me about the #ClimateCrisis is we don’t know how bad things really are
"What we do know is that so far, the effects of heating the #Climate are sooner and worse than many scientists projected (in public at least)"
https://t.co/ynMtK3azNX
2023 was a bad year for the Antarctic Sea Ice Extent, by far the lowest extent in average.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 7, 2024
The situation in December was still with a big deficit in East Antarctica while it was near normal in West Antarctica.
Map by NSIDC. pic.twitter.com/VkjKA7g053
#Arctic sea ice extent is currently the 20th lowest on record (JAXA data)
— Zack Labe (@ZLabe) January 5, 2024
• about 410,000 km² above the 2010s mean
• about 140,000 km² below the 2000s mean
• about 710,000 km² below the 1990s mean
• about 1,140,000 km² below the 1980s mean
Plots: https://t.co/tBkW5GBOxd pic.twitter.com/iXEz3FREG9
Your 'moment of doom' for Jan. 7, 2024 ~ The chaos is just beginning.
— Prof. Eliot Jacobson (@EliotJacobson) January 7, 2024
"These waves of chaos that seem to rise and fall. Before you get back to some level of normalcy another event happens that sort of throws things out of whack."https://t.co/UBHEYxPDPQhttps://t.co/fluRK9KsMf
Who will feed the #UK when the farmland is flooded, and the #crops rot in the fields? The UK already imports ~50% of its food. "#Farmers looking at ‘huge losses’ after major incident declared over #flooding" https://t.co/qU0JSlElbR pic.twitter.com/JiXzTH7tQ3
— Peter Dynes (@PGDynes) January 7, 2024
More from the Weather Department:
Looks like Winter Storm #Finn will give us a lot to chat about tomorrow👀 pic.twitter.com/Pn6DCKBv7n
— The Weather Channel (@weatherchannel) January 8, 2024
Still tweaking as is proper but still be ready! https://t.co/dHbZ0J4XYZ
— Jim Cantore (@JimCantore) January 7, 2024
11:56pm CST #SPC Day1 Outlook Enhanced Risk: across the central Gulf Coast tonight into early Tuesday morning https://t.co/TgJgC6cQZw pic.twitter.com/c2RAZDvvOC
— NWS Storm Prediction Center (@NWSSPC) January 8, 2024
Next up: Winter Storm #Finn
— The Weather Channel (@weatherchannel) January 7, 2024
More than 24 million people are under winter alerts, with more expected as the storm ramps up this week, potentially bringing blizzard conditions over the central U.S.
We're LIVE getting you prepared! pic.twitter.com/FBS8SF1Wzj
As the snow winds down in the northeast, another storm crosses the country. This one also has a severe side along the gulf coast. I'm with @ReynoldsWolf in studio, but we will also check in with our crews out in the storm. @weatherchannel #Ember #finn pic.twitter.com/LNnUhcKgcH
— Kelly Cass (@kellycass) January 7, 2024
Winter Storm Finn To Bring Severe Weather
— James Wilson (@tornadokid3) January 7, 2024
From The Weather Channel iPhone App https://t.co/Ga1QrLvHUw pic.twitter.com/gbZcanqy7m
1/7/24: In addition to the severe-storm threat on Monday (1/8), severe thunderstorms capable of all hazards will continue spreading eastward across parts of the Gulf Coast and Southeast on Tuesday (1/9). Keep up with the latest forecast information at: https://t.co/St6FGvEy8Q pic.twitter.com/54FmMTnOM3
— NWS Storm Prediction Center (@NWSSPC) January 7, 2024
Here's a look at the radar evolution over the last 18 hours.
— Tomer Burg (@burgwx) January 7, 2024
The highest totals so far – over 12" in a narrow corridor – came from last night's intense band as it gradually slowed down, resulting in a long duration of heavy snow rates.
Follow-up note on ptypes in the next post: pic.twitter.com/wqvh0vvo8t
Snowfall reports received as of 100 pm Sun Jan 7th. Highest totals so far by state:
— NWS Eastern Region (@NWSEastern) January 7, 2024
NY Milton 18"
MA Haverhill 13.5"
VT Orange 13"
ME E. Wakefield 13"
NH Plaistow 13"
NJ Wantage 12.6"
PA Paupack 12.4"
CT Norfolk 12"
MD Frostburg 7.1"
VA Hightown 7"
WV Snowshoe 7"
RI Foster 6.1" pic.twitter.com/blOo54bIG7
Parts of New England were transformed into a winter wonderland as the first winter storm of 2024 brought nearly a foot of snow to some areas. pic.twitter.com/4KaIlTnI4V
— AccuWeather (@accuweather) January 7, 2024
WOW
— WeatherNation (@WeatherNation) January 7, 2024
Here's another UNREAL view of the #tornado yesterday in south Florida.
The NWS office is planning to get out and survey the damage later today#FLwx pic.twitter.com/Jb1bPV1lKq
Best video yet of the Fort Lauderdale, FL #tornado showing the compact supercell structure and as the tornado passed into the waterway pic.twitter.com/TwfgnuUmS4
— Reed Timmer, PhD (@ReedTimmerAccu) January 7, 2024
Today’s News on Sustainable Energy, Traditional Polluting Energy from Fossil Fuel, and the Green Revolution:
Good climate news this week
— Assaad Razzouk (@AssaadRazzouk) January 7, 2024
1 China in huge V2G charging push by 2030
2 Indonesia renewables now cheaper than coal
3 EU fossil fuels electricity down 21% in 2023
4 Fossil down to 35% of Britain’s electricity
5 Germany doubles solar in 2023
6 Port of Virginia goes 100% renewables https://t.co/mVUWkupXwK
A game changer
— GO GREEN (@ECOWARRIORSS) January 7, 2024
Sweden's Northvolt has developed an energy storage technology that has no lithium, cobalt, graphite or nickel
Its battery has a significantly lower carbon footprint – at 10-20 kg of CO2 per kWh, compared to the 100-150 kg of CO2 per kWhhttps://t.co/o6jv9edYez
The Guardian view on fare-free public transport: good for people as well as the planet | Editorial https://t.co/oxJp87CcS2
— Guardian Environment (@guardianeco) January 7, 2024
Analysis: UK electricity from fossil fuels drops to lowest level since 1957 | @DrSimEvans @VernerViisas
— Carbon Brief (@CarbonBrief) January 7, 2024
Read here: https://t.co/XQ1lrwByLW pic.twitter.com/0QXqHNBe2g
#ClimateJustice now! It’s time to #BanPrivateJets
— Greenpeace International (@Greenpeace) January 7, 2024
Add your voice 👉🏼https://t.co/WBw7ECCGbt
While 80% of people have never taken a plane, the super rich are flying their private jets whenever they feel like it, sometimes for less than 10 minutes. 🙄 🙄 pic.twitter.com/zAnbC4P9Ez
Superb news on the #NetZero transition
— Prof. Peter Strachan (@ProfStrachan) January 7, 2024
Green projects are boosting UK jobs-#CBI report
"The #EnergyTransition to a greener economy is worth £71bn and has brought jobs and investment to parts of the UK experiencing industrial decline"#RenewableEnergyhttps://t.co/lC0f4XjiRM
54% of Portugal’s electricity is now generated by #RenewableEnergy
— Prof. Peter Strachan (@ProfStrachan) January 7, 2024
"No #Nuclear, no #Coal-produced power. Sometimes the progress passes our attention, but we should be aware of the significant progress #Portugal is making."#EnergyTransition #WWShttps://t.co/LmmNBRVGb3
China is installing a record amount of solar – including over 2.4 million homes being given a solar upgrade: https://t.co/S9LSyTKocr.
— Mike Hudema (@MikeHudema) January 8, 2024
We have the solutions. Time to phase out coal and other fossil fuels and implement them. #ActOnClimate #climate #energy #renewables #CatchUP pic.twitter.com/mWUSNstYiF
More on the Environment and Nature:
Flowers everywhere? England’s ambitious scheme to restore wildlife hangs in the balance https://t.co/3bzR3pVTz2
— Guardian Environment (@guardianeco) January 8, 2024
A quick reminder for today
— Green is a mission (@Greenisamissio1) January 7, 2024
If the heat bothers you, plant a tree.🌱
If the water bothers you, plant a tree. 🌲
If you like fruits, plant a tree. 🌿
If you like birds, plant a tree.🌳
If you love your family, plant trees 🌳
And if you like life, plant many trees. 🌳🌲🍀💚 pic.twitter.com/934xUkAZrA
They could even save your home from flooding
— GO GREEN (@ECOWARRIORSS) January 7, 2024
For the first time in four centuries, it’s good to be a beaver. Long persecuted for their pelts and reviled as pests, the dam-building rodents are today hailed by scientists as ecological saviorshttps://t.co/4fqG5FqQ3n
More on Other Science and the Beauty of Earth and this Universe:
SNOW much fun in Albany, New York! ❄️❄️
— AccuWeather (@accuweather) January 7, 2024
Residents are snowboarding, sledding, and snowshoeing as the first winter storm of 2024 impacts upstate NY. pic.twitter.com/RKQWxZYK0T
Night thoughts
— Green is a mission (@Greenisamissio1) January 7, 2024
One of the most important arts of human life today is to be able to delight in nature alone and to escape all artificially created abundance.💚🌿🌱☘️🌲🌳🍀💚 pic.twitter.com/iHiZ1HpHdL